Java Performance Tools – 8 Types of Tools You Need to Know!

Performance Tools for Java

Keeping track of your application’s performance is an ongoing task, so it is important to have the right tools. What works in development might not be quite as helpful in a production environment. Here, I will go over some great tools and the best time to use them. The goal is to help you make reliable and high-performing apps as fast as possible.

1. Java Profilers

JVM Profiles offer a ton of raw data by tracking all method calls, allowing you to find CPU and memory consumption hotspots. A good scaling test is to set up an Apache JMeter job to hit an endpoint you are developing a few thousand times while linked to a profiler. This allows you to spec out memory and CPU requirements for production.

Screenshot of VisualVM CPU and Heap Size

Pros: Great for tracking down memory leaks, the ability to manually run garbage collection and then review memory consumption can easily shine a spotlight on classes and processes that are holding on to memory in error.

Cons: Requires a direct connection to the monitored JVM; this ends up limiting usage to development environments in most cases. (Note: some profilers can work off thread and memory dumps in a limited fashion.)

2. Tracing Java Web Requests and Transactions

Standard profilers are focused on the performance of all methods across the entire application. These tools are focused on the performance of individual web requests or transactions.

Prefix provides deep level performance details about your app. Including ORM calls with generated SQL, SOAP/REST API calls, and trace details from the most commonly used third-party libraries and frameworks.

XRebel is set up using a Java Agent on your web application’s container and provides an overlay on your application that gives details about the current request.

Tools like Prefix can provide very detailed traces of what your code is doing:

Screenshot of Prefix web request trace

Pros: These tools give order to the vast amount of data available in a JVM profiler. By helping you follow the flow of a request, you can see what types of method calls are responsible for your response time.

Cons: Designed for the development cycle only. QA and Production environments will require an APM solution.

3. Java Application Performance Management (APM)

Application Performance Management (APM) tools take on the task of tracking all requests on a production system. The trick with these profilers is to provide the right information in a smart way to not impact production performance. This is done by aggregating timing statistics and sampling traces. This gives you method level visibility to your code that is running in production.

Screenshot: Retrace Action Overview

Pros: The ability to monitor your most critical environment: Production. Identify issues before going into production by monitoring QA/Staging. Debug production live by analyzing traces and exceptions. Aggregate summaries to see highly used requests to help focus development time.

Cons: Typically expensive to run on all QA/Staging and Production servers. Some tools lack support for async queries or are not tuned properly and slow down your application.

Pros: Available in any application running on the JVM and easy to connect to with apps such as JConsole.

Cons: Can be difficult to connect to in a staging and production environment. Aggregation and comparing data might be time-consuming. Stats are only gathered while the monitor is connected to the JVM.

6. Web Server (Apache/Nginx) Access Logs

If you have Apache or Nginx proxying requests to your Java application server, you can monitor access logs. This is a quick way to see how long requests are taking. You can aggregate the access logs to see what the most popular/fastest/slowest endpoints are. Doing this via the command line can be time-consuming, though.

For small datasets, you can use a desktop tool like Apache Viewer, but for staging and production environments, a hosted logging solution is ideal.

Tracking Failed Requests is also very useful, which can be done by aggregating on HTTP Response Codes.

Pros: Quick way to get some simple stats by tailing access logs, or – if more info is needed – push into a log analyzer.

Cons: Doesn’t give you any details as to why the request took as long as it did. Lack of POST data and response content that could help point you to the cause of a performance issue.

7. Tracking All Java Exceptions

One of the biggest causes of performance problems can be application exceptions. When an exception is thrown, it causes the thread to pause while the stack trace is collected. Even handled exceptions that seem innocent can cause huge performance bottlenecks under heavy server load. It is important to aggregate and monitor all of your exceptions to find critical problems, new errors, and monitor error rates over time.

8. Memory Analysis

Application memory analysis after a crash can help with identifying the cause of a memory leak. You can instruct the JVM to dump the heap on an OutOfMemoryError exception by adding the following argument to the JVM:

-XX:+HeapDumpOnOutOfMemoryError

The heap dump file can be loaded into an analyzer – Eclipse MAT. You can dive into the Overview or Leaks Suspects reports to help identify the cause of the memory exception.

Screenshot of Eclipse MAT: Biggest Objects by Retained Size

Conclusion on Java Performance Tools

The big takeaway is that making and keeping your Java application performance is easier than ever with all these tools. Don’t be overwhelmed by all the things you should be doing. Start with the low hanging fruit first, like exception tracking. It is really good to at least know what options are available to you, and I hope you found this list helpful.